We translated the Palantir manifesto for actual human beings

Palantir CEO Alex Karp is a man in charge of one of the most important and frightening companies in the world. Karp’s new book, co-written with Nicholas Zamiska, is called “The Technological Republic.” After claiming “because we get asked a lot”, Palantir posted a 22-point summary of the book that reads like a corporate manifesto. […]

Ordering with the Starbucks ChatGPT app was a true coffee nightmare

Venti iced coffee, light skim milk. That’s what I get at Starbucks. It is what I have gotten at Starbucks every time I’ve been to Starbucks for as long as I can remember, other than a brief love affair with the caffe misto a few years ago. In person, my brain barely needs to activate […]

Greece exempts Britons from EES biometric registration for summer

Greece exempts Britons from EES biometric registration for summer
Alarm at severe delays caused by the EES rollout in European airports may have dampened British enthusiasm for the traditional summer getaway, but Athens is looking to get Britons back on board.

Greece has just announced biometric exemptions for British visitors. This means they will not be required to provide fingerprint and face biometrics. In 2025 nearly five million Brits headed to the Mediterranean country, representing a huge contributor to Greece’s tourism industry.

Eleni Skarvedi, director of the Greek National Tourism Organization in the UK, told The Independent that the move is intended to ensure a “smoother and more efficient travel experience in Greece.”

“Practically, this means that the entry process in place before the implementation of the EES will remain unchanged,” she said to the newspaper.

This means Britons will need to have their passports manually checked and stamped while personal data is “skimmed” and logged. EES kiosks at Athens airport will remain open to other third-country nationals, but won’t be open to British travelers.

The Greek embassy in London made it clear that British passport holders are excluded from biometric registration at all Greek border crossing points. However, Brussels has taken a somewhat dim view of Athen’s decision.

A spokesperson for the European Commission said contact has been made with Greek authorities to “receive clarifications” and that the legal framework underpinning EES “does not foresee blanket exemption” for specific third-country nationals and for an extended duration.

Generally, however, the EES does allow flexibility for the registration of biometrics with suspension of collection possible at specific borders and for a limited duration in cases of “exceptional circumstances that lead to excessive waiting times,” the spokesperson said, quoted in The Independent.

The decision by Greece to suspend the EES system across its border checkpoints just for British visitors and for the whole of summer may cause tension with the EU. Brussels’ concern may grow if other countries that are popular destinations for Britons, such as Spain and Portugal, decide to follow suit. While there is no indication of that just yet, France has already bent the rules by allowing visitors in cars to forgo EES at French checkpoints at the Port of Dover in southeast England.

The first week of Europe’s EES was marred by delays even as there was widespread suspension of the biometrics enrollment that forms the foundation of the system. Airports and airlines called for more flexible implementation rules in response, but appeared in some cases to have botched staffing and organization.

AI backlash is coming for elections

Ask Americans how they feel about AI and most say they have concerns. Communities have mounted resistance to data center projects, stalling them across the US. On social media, anger at AI companies and executives is unrestrained – sometimes to the point of condoning violence. But look at the issues that most campaigns are focused […]